Xikun Hu, Wenlin Liu, et al.
IEEE J-STARS
Evaluating a fractal curve’s “approximate length” by walking a compass defines a “compass exponent.” Long ago, I showed that for a self-similar curve (e.g., a model of coastline), the compass exponent coincides with all the other forms of the fractal dimension, e.g., the similarity, box or mass dimensions. Now walk a compass along a self-affine curve, such as a scalar Brownian record BH(t). It will be shown that a full description in terms of fractal dimension is complex. Each version of dimension has a local and a global value, separated by a crossover. First finding: The basic methods of evaluating the global fractal dimension yield 1: globally, a self-affine fractal behaves as it if were not fractal. Second finding: the box and mass dimensions are 1.5, but the compass dimension is D = 2. More generally, for a fractional Bownian record BH(t). (e.g., a model of vertical cuts of relief), the global fractal dimensions are 1, several local fractal dimensions are 2-H, and the compass dimension is 1/H. This l/H is the fractal dimension of a self-similar fractal trail, whose definition was already implicit in the definition of the record of BH(t). © 1985 IOP Publishing Ltd.
Xikun Hu, Wenlin Liu, et al.
IEEE J-STARS
R.J. Gambino, N.R. Stemple, et al.
Journal of Physics and Chemistry of Solids
Zelek S. Herman, Robert F. Kirchner, et al.
Inorganic Chemistry
R.M. Macfarlane, R.L. Cone
Physical Review B - CMMP